Geek Mafia by Rick Dakan (read book .txt) 📕
"I'm not really entirely sure," he said, although this was a stalling tactic. He knew pretty well why he was getting fired; he just didn't quite know how to put it into words. It'd only been a couple of hours since his high school friend and CEO had told him what was happening. "I mean, they gave me reasons, but they're not really reasons. They're not things I did wrong."
"What does that mean? They didn't like your looks?"
"Yeah, basically," said Paul. "More to the point, they didn't like the look of how I was doing things. What I mean is, I'm not a tech guy right? I'm an artist and a writer. I'm used to working at home and scribbling away and meeting my deadlines. So when I helped start this company, I figured it would be mostly the same. I figured I'd sit in my office and do my work and hit my deadlines and go to my meetings and all that."
"But you didn't do that?" asked Chloe as she pla
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She smiled wryly. “That would be telling. And Winston didn’t give me permission to spill those secrets. Not that I really know any details anyway. But no, they don’t bomb things, nothing violent anymore. No blowing things up either. But as to specifics, I don’t know. Just like Winston doesn’t know anything about us helping you settle your score with your old boss or you helping us counterfeit comics. No good can come of telling people shit they don’t need to know.”
“You mentioned that you wished your crew was more like Winston’s. More socially active or whatever. Why aren’t you? Why not do cons with a political point instead of just stealing from people?”
“Like I said, I’d like to. I’d probably love it if I tried it. But that’s just not our vibe.”
“That’s right, you’re all about the money.”
“Sort of, yeah, of course. We’re about the money because the money is what keeps the crew together and happy. And the crew’s my family. My peeps. I want them to be happy.”
“Huh,” said Paul, mulling her words over. There was something to what she was saying, but he couldn’t put his finger on it, something about the difference in the vibe between Chloe’s crew and Winston’s. Chloe’s crew felt like a fraternity or a club – people who were very close and supported one another, but who all had their own agendas. Winston’s crew on the other hand, felt like a family. Like the most important thing in the world was supporting each other. That was the sense he’d gotten anyway, but he’d only spent one night with them. “So how did you meet Winston anyway?” he asked. “How did you two become so close?”
“There’s a whole network of groups like ours out there, each Crew operating totally independently from one another. But we do keep in touch. Winston, in fact, is the one who originally set up the network, at least here on the West Coast. Not that many people know that anymore. But we all communicate with one another through coded message boards and secret drop sites. It’s good to have other contacts in the game in case you need something from an area of expertise you can’t cover. We’re pretty well rounded, because that’s the way I like my Crew to run. But others specialize. There’s hacker specialists or surveillance specialists or even breaking and entering specialists, all kinds of different crews out there. More than the government would care to imagine I’m sure. When our Crew was first getting started, Winston somehow found out about me and introduced my little group into the network. He’s my mentor in the life.”
Paul sat in silence and thought about this idea for a moment. Chloe started to say something else, but he interrupted her. “I never know when to believe you and when not to.”
“Why’s that?”
“Well, you’re an admitted con-woman for one.”
“Sure, but why do you doubt me now?”
“Because it’s crazy, that’s why! You’re telling me you’re part of some vast underground conspiracy or something. That there’s this whole network of you out there living off the books and pulling scams on us normal folk.”
“What’s crazy is that you consider yourself normal folk,” said Chloe. “Beyond that, why’s the rest of it so crazy? We’re a community, not a conspiracy. Like Dead Heads or the mob or biker gangs or any other specialized group in this country. It’s not crazy – in fact it’s so commonplace I’m surprised you’re surprised.”
Paul didn’t know what to say to this and so said nothing. After a moment Chloe turned the music back up and concentrated on the drive. Her story seemed to fit everything he’d seen with his own two eyes over the past couple of weeks, but it didn’t fit at all into the world-view he’d developed over the past thirty years or so. He still had a lot of questions, but decided it was better not to press the issue now. He rode on in silence for a few more minutes before launching a new conversational gambit aimed at lightening the mood.
“Who is this band we’re listening to anyway?” he asked. “The woman singing sounds familiar but I don’t know the song.”
“It’s me, you goofball, of course you recognize it,” she said. “Me and my band. The Flying Crutchmen.”
“You were in a band?”
“You’ve obviously never heard me sing – of course I was in a band.” She looked wistfully out the window, as if remembering her glory days on the stage. “Man, I could tell you some stories about those days.”
“Go ahead,” said Paul, “It’s a long drive.”
It was over an hour later, when she couldn’t stop herself from laughing during her description of the band’s tour of Albania, that Paul finally realized she was bullshitting him once again. But her stories made the ride pass in fun, and they both laughed when he called her on it. And Paul definitely preferred her when she laughed.
CHAPTER 17
When they got back to Chloe’s house, there wasn’t a parking space to be found – the place looked like it was full to the rafters with Crew members, but there wasn’t any party going on. Paul and Chloe opened the door and stepped into chaos. Bee was there in the living room, networking together several computers, connected by a thick cord to the server room. “Hey, Chloe, Paul,” was all she took time to say before bending back to her work.
“Looks like I got back just in time,” said Chloe, to no one in particular. She handed Paul her backpack and said to him, “Paul, could you put this away in my bedroom. Might as well unpack your own stuff in there as well, the Crew seems to have co-opted your couch.”
“Sure,” said Paul, bristling a little at being told what to do, but happy to be making the jump up from couch to Chloe’s bedroom. “What’s going on?”
“Raff’s little score, isn’t looking too little anymore.” She said to herself as much as to Paul, and stalked into the kitchen shouting, “Where’s Raff?”
“He’s in the garage,” said Bee. Chloe swept back through the living room towards the back of the house. Paul followed her as far as the garage door, but she opened it and closed it behind her before he could get in a word or a glimpse. He went back to Chloe’s room and dropped their bags. They’d tell him what was going on eventually, and right now he felt sticky and cold, and decided he should probably shower before he even sat down on Chloe’s crisp, white sheets. She had her own bathroom, which was a nice luxury in this crowded house. He stripped down and took a shower, hoping that Chloe just might decide to join him.
As it turned out, Paul didn’t see Chloe again that day. By the time he came back out, she’d gone somewhere, although none of the dozen or so crewmembers in the house seemed to know where (or, more likely, were unwilling to tell him). Bee intercepted him as he tried to go into the garage, saying that he wasn’t allowed in there right now, same for the Sever Room. He had the run of the rest of the house, but no one had time to talk to him. He made himself a turkey sandwich and watched the hustle and bustle whirl around him. From his vantage he could only see the operation’s periphery and couldn’t even begin to guess what it was they were doing.
Bee made a little time to sit with him while she shoveled Ramen noodles into her mouth. “How was your trip?” she asked.
“Good. It was fun for sure.”
“Great.”
“What’s going on here?” he asked.
“Not much,” she replied. “What’d you do on your trip?”
“Not much really,” was all he could think to say. He got the message though. Everyone here had secrets and you had to respect those boundaries and not ask questions you know people don’t want to answer. They finished their meals in silence.
“You should see a movie or something,” said Bee as she rinsed out her bowl at the sink. “It’s not going to be very exciting or fun around here tonight.”
“Maybe,” said Paul. “Do you know when Chloe’s getting back?”
“Nope.”
“Ok, thanks” He watched her as she jumped back into the fray. She’d spotted something that one of the other crewmembers was doing wrong and corrected him on it, immediately becoming lost in her work once more.
Paul decided against the movie. He wasn’t interested in anything that was playing. The truth was, there wasn’t any movie out there that was more interesting than his own life had become since he met Chloe. He ended up lying on her bed and reading a pile of the old comics left over from the comic con. He fell asleep around 1 AM with the lights on.
He saw Chloe the next morning, as she came into her room to grab a quick shower and change out of the clothes she was still wearing from the day before. Paul took the fact that she brought her clean jeans and shirt into the bathroom with her and locked the door as a sign that whatever had happened at the beach might not become a habit between them. He pretended to be asleep as she quietly gathered her clothes and then he slipped out into the living room while she showered.
Not much had changed in the rest of the house. With the shades drawn tight and the crowd of hackers hunched in front of their computers, Paul noticed little difference between now and eight hours ago. He scrounged up some cereal but had to settle for soymilk. A few minutes later Chloe came into the kitchen, still damp from the shower.
“Hey,” she said. “Any coffee in here?”
“Not that I can see,” said Paul into his cereal.
Chloe pulled a bag of coffee beans from the freezer and started measuring them out into the grinder. “You sleep ok?”
“Yeah. Did you manage to sleep at all?”
“Sadly, no. I’m running on fumes here. Well, fumes and a little pharmaceutical help. It was a busy night.”
“What’s going on?” asked Paul, still looking down into his bowl of soy soaked corn flakes. The high-pitched buzz of the coffee grinder filled the room in place of Chloe’s refusal to answer his question.
As she waited for the coffee to brew, Chloe cleaned dishes and straightened up the kitchen, her back kept studiously to Paul as he finished his breakfast. He had known she wouldn’t tell him what was going on, but that didn’t mean he was happy about it. Let her deal with the awkwardness of the situation. No reason to make it easy for her. And so he waited for her answer in silence.
Chloe finally gave in and sat down next to Paul at the table with a fresh cup of coffee.
“Listen Paul, you know how this works right?” She sipped from her mug. “We’re obviously up to something and only those, you know, ‘in the know’ get to, well, know.”
“And I can’t be in the know?”
“You’re not a member of the Crew, Paul. You haven’t paid your dues. This is some serious shit and no one really trusts you yet. Nor should they.”
“What about the comic book thing? Didn’t that prove my loyalty or whatever?”
“Sort of, sure.” She leaned forward and gently brushed his cheek with the back of her hand. He raised his head and looked her in
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